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BRIEFING European Union History Series Konrad Adenauer Europe's elder statesman SUMMARY Konrad Adenauer was born at the end of the 19th century in imperial Germany. Growing up in relatively humble surroundings, he adopted Prussian values and a Christian faith that guided him throughout his life. Adenauer first took up political office in 1906, as city councillor of his home town of Cologne. In 1909, he became president of the city council. He was then elected Lord Mayor of Cologne in 1917 – at the age of just 41. With the end of the First World War, Adenauer made efforts to promote transnational cooperation with Germany's neighbours to the West on several occasions – a progressive move at that point in time. When, in February 1933, the newly elected German Chancellor Adolf Hitler visited Cologne, Konrad Adenauer refused to receive him – a decision that saw him removed from his position as Lord Mayor. Forced into political exile – even incarcerated at one point – he spent the following 12 years with his family at his home in Rhöndorf. After the defeat of Nazi Germany, Adenauer was determined to establish a political platform that would unite people around core Christian and democratic values and it was on this basis that he was elected as the first Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany in September 1949. Throughout his 14 years as Chancellor of Germany, Konrad Adenauer remained determined to integrate Germany into a value-based European political system. Therefore, reconciliation, rapprochement and cooperation with France became the central goals of Adenauer's foreign policy, ultimately shaping German policy up to the present day. In this Briefing The imperial era – early life A political figure in Weimar Germany Political demise – Adenauer under Nazi oppression Post-war Germany (Re-)integrating Germany in the West Adenauer and the European project EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service Author: Philippe Perchoc with Marian Gideon Pietsch Members' Research Service PE 628.309 – April 2019 EN EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service The imperial era – early life Konrad Adenauer was born on 5 January 1876 in Cologne as the third of five children to Johan Conrad and Helene Adenauer. Brought up in relatively humble surroundings, Konrad adopted the Prussian values his parents exemplified: obedience, discipline and, above all, dutiful service. While the Catholic faith was always of prime importance for the Adenauer family, his religious beliefs did not predetermine his political actions; rather they acted more as a philosophy that guided his moral compass. These virtues as well as his experiences with the Prussian authorities during the 'Kulturkampf' (the conflict between the German imperial government and the Roman Catholic Church) would determine Adenauer's political stance for decades to come.1 In 1894, on a modest stipend from the City of Cologne, Adenauer began studying law at the University of Freiburg. After a short stay in Munich, he completed his first state examination in Bonn in 1897 and his second in Berlin in 1901. Having completed his studies, he began working as a junior prosecutor at the Cologne Regional Court before joining a law firm in 1902. There, he came into contact with local politics, as his boss, Hermann Kausen, was the Chairman of the Zentrum Party in the city council.2 Zentrum was a major political party that represented political Catholicism Konrad Adenauer as a student (first from right). during both the imperial and the Weimar eras. Source: Robert Krewalts, Stiftung Bundeskanzler-Adenauer-Haus Eventually, his Catholic background led (StBKAH). Adenauer to join this party in 1905. In 1906, aided by his new wife Emma Weyer and her family background, bringing him into contact with the Rhineland's social and political elite, Adenauer ran successfully for a city councillor post in Cologne.3 Three years later, in 1909, he was elected president of the council, becoming deputy Lord Mayor at just 33 years of age. In this position, Adenauer was in charge of organising the food supply for the city of Cologne during the First World War. He proved resourceful as well as dutiful in his responsibility for the wellbeing of over 600 000 inhabitants, signing several agreements with local farmers and thus ensuring a steady food supply for Cologne.4 Eventually, in 1917, Adenauer was elected Lord Mayor of Cologne, at just 41 years of age.5 Yet, with professional and personal success came personal tragedy – a pattern that was to trouble the politician repeatedly. In 1906, just three days after his election as city councillor, Adenauer's father died of a heart attack. In 1910, his first son was born – but the delivery brought medical complications for his wife that worsened over time. Emma died in October 1916 leaving her husband and three young children. Just weeks later, Adenauer survived a car accident that left him with facial injuries that marked him throughout his life.6 A political figure in Weimar Germany After the First World War, Adenauer's influence grew beyond his home region of the Rhineland. As the youngest mayor in Germany, he became President of the Prussian State Council (the Prussian Upper House in which the regions were represented). He modernised Cologne to a significant degree and was repeatedly mentioned as a possible candidate for the chancellorship in government circles.7 2 Konrad Adenauer, Europe's elder statesman It was in these circumstances that his ambitions in transnational policy seemed to emerge for the first time. As Mayor of Cologne, Adenauer was eager to promote cross-border cooperation on political and economic issues with France, Belgium and the Netherlands.8 Additionally, his perception of Prussia and the issue of compensation for France made Adenauer a key figure in the 'Rhineland Problem' during the early 1920s. To prevent the annexation of the Rhineland by France, the pragmatic Adenauer saw autonomy as the best compromise – an attitude that was interpreted as separatist and unpatriotic by many of his contemporaries.9 It was in this progressive, transnational spirit that Adenauer met Alcide de Gasperi for the first time. In 1921, the two politicians held talks about forming a Christian Democratic international union in Cologne. Although both stood for the same values, transnational cooperation between Konrad Adenauer as Mayor of Cologne, date unknown. conservative parties seemed unfeasible at Source: Unknown, Stiftung Bundeskanzler-Adenauer-Haus (StBKAH). the time. It was a long 30 years before they were to meet again, with one common goal in mind: lasting peace in Europe. Political demise – Adenauer under Nazi oppression In February 1933, Adenauer refused to 'The charges against you made public so far are just the receive the newly appointed German beginning, [...] You are a criminal to the people who had Chancellor Adolf Hitler in Cologne. To the put their trust in you [...] You are a criminal against the further annoyance of the Führer, the Mayor city you have ruined [...] You are a criminal, guilty of ordered the removal of NSDAP flags that crimes against your family and your wife [...] You are had been raised by the Sturmabteilung (SA, guilty of crimes against our Lord God and against those Assault Division) on a main bridge.10 who have come in contact with you. You are the Affronted, the Nazi Party seemed accused; I am your accuser; the people are your judge'. determined to destroy Adenauer's Günter Riesen to Konrad Adenauer, 21 March 1933 reputation by portraying him as a traitor in Source: V. Martín de la Torre, Europe, a leap into the unknown – A his role in the 'Rhineland Movement' of the journey back in time to meet the founders of the European Union, 1920s. Additionally, rumours of a planned P.I.E. Peter Lang, 2014, p. 116. terrorist attack against him made his life increasingly dangerous. Fed up with living in constant fear, Adenauer left Cologne in March 1933 to issue a formal complaint with the Interior Minister in Berlin. Upon departure, the newspapers announced the immediate dismissal of the Mayor. Three days later, Adenauer returned to learn that a Nazi official had replaced him.11 Adenauer did not give up on all fronts however; he fought for his pension rights, and in 1934 settled with the municipality of Cologne out of court. From the financial settlement he won, Adenauer built a family home in nearby Rhöndorf.12 Unable to continue in politics, he was forced to spend the years of the Nazi regime in exile. When war broke out, he had to send his two eldest sons to sign up. He chose not to be involved in any subversive activities, but in July 1944, two men approached him with details of a plan to overthrow the regime. The assassination attempt failed and Adenauer was jailed by the Gestapo for several months, escaping a transfer to the concentration camp at Buchenwald thanks to the help of close friends. He was released in October 1944, and spent the rest of the war with his family in Rhöndorf.13 3 EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service Post-war Germany In May 1945, just weeks after the liberation of Cologne, Konrad Adenauer was appointed Mayor of Cologne by the Americans. He was part of a 'white list' of personally untainted people who were considered fit for political office. In June 1945, control over Cologne passed to the British military, and in October 1945, just five months after his appointment, Adenauer's second term as mayor of his home town came to an end, as he was dismissed by Brigadier John Barraclough, the military governor of the Cologne region, on grounds of 'incompetence'.14 The 'founding' of the CDU After being sacked by the British authorities, Adenauer did not refrain from political activity despite a clear instruction to do so.
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